Re: Nursing 101 Question - Experienced Nurses, how would you answer this?
I totally agree that the question is badly phrased and does not allow for much latitude.
Yes monitoring their peripheral neuro-vascular state should be the first port of call, as well as securing additional analgesia a close second.... Though I would like to hope that the patient received some analgesia before the cast was applied as some plaster techs can be a little rough when applying the cast to get the alignment correct.
At the end of the day though, the first 5 signs of compartment syndrome are
PAIN
PAIN
PAIN
PAIN
and PAIN
If you have an altered neuro-vasc state, it is actually getting quite late in the game and you are already sustaining tissue damage. Therefore I would get the plaster saw and bi-valve the cast (cut in along one line from proximal to distal end. This splits the cast just enough to provide additional room for swelling. If your patient gets pain relief from cutting the cast then consider yourself as having done the right thing.
Many of the nurses i work with are reluctant to cut a cast... but i always say to them "a cast can be replaced... an arm cannot"
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